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String Quartets for Beginning Ensembles; Volume 2 (Suzuki Violin School)

ebooks String Quartets for Beginning Ensembles; Volume 2 (Suzuki Violin School) by Joseph Knaus in Arts-Photography

Description

Award-winning composer; arranger; pianist and recording artist Mark Hayes has crafted a superb anthology of ten traditional spirituals for vocal soloist with piano accompaniment in true art-song style; ideal for school or church singers.Titles: * Deep River* Go; Tell it on the Mountain* Steal Away to Heaven* I Feel the Spirit Moving* There is a Balm in Gilead* Behold the Star!* My Lord; What a Morning* The Gospel of Grace* Give Me Jesus* Joshua Fit the Battle of Jericho


#1224095 in eBooks 1995-11-16 2015-04-30File Name: B00EUUQNWU


Review
19 of 23 people found the following review helpful. Good Reference - Fine line to Hubris....By Jane SandorfThis book is organized in two parts: theory and name-throwing. The theory parts are at times interesting; at times obscure and redundant. They precede chapters full of names; (supposedly big names) in the "information arts". To be fair; Wilson collected a huge database of names to be included in this volume and it serves a purpose. It is a good starting point for someone to look up people and their work. Not enough descriptions of what people do unfortunately. At least the names are highlighted and indexed so you can quickly go through it and pick up names. It is a name book...and a good stroke to many peoples egos; including Wilsons who doesnt omit himself and the "I...once upon a time" reference to himself and his greatness. Being that there is nothing else like it out there; it is a good addition to ones reference shelf. But dont rely on it to measure greatness and dont hold your breath for super-exciting theory you havent read before. Quite an undertaking; and with omissions which at least Wilson admits to. Give it a try. The pictures are not that great. If anything; they take away from the "mystique" of the who-is-who rather than add to it.2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Essential to any Artists LibraryBy BGThis publication is a valuable asset for any artists library. It is a necessary survey of artists exploring the interactions of art; technology and information. It is well written. The referenced publications are vast and ever intriguing. It is period appropriate. The understanding of what is presented is essential to contemporary art history. I would love to see an updated edition every year. Perhaps this should be a whole university course.9 of 11 people found the following review helpful. lotsa cool stuffBy A CustomerI really liked this book. Im interested in computer art but Information Arts shows that is just the top of the iceberg -- artists dancing in zero gravity; learning how to change the patterns on butterfly wings; reclaiming toxic waste dumps; planting chips in their body; making radioactive sculptures; breeding artificial life.... You really begin to get a glimpse of what kind of art is coming down the road.I appreciated the systematic way the book dealt with all these topics. There are chapters on art exploring biology; particle physics; space art; mathematical art; artificial life; etc. The author seemed to work hard to find artists from all over the world coming at it from different points of view. Also each section also offers a review of relevant theory; and seemed very fair in its attempt to offer a full range of opinions.There are two kinds of artist sections in the book - multipage sections with an image and samples of the artists writing; and shorter sections of a few lines. I wish there were more details on the less described artists but then the book would have been bigger than its already huge 1000 pages. Also; I wish the images were color. The author provides web links for all the artists. Its a great starting point; although it could have used tighter editing (still its great exercise equipment!).

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